Have you ever wondered what the oldest living languages are? That question is harder to answer than it might seem at first. The origins of many languages are lost in time, and it’s hard to say which is the oldest.

That said, some languages are older than others. So, let’s take a look at 10 of the oldest living languages in the world today:

Hebrew

How old is the Hebrew language? Over 3000 years oldWhere is it spoken? Primarily in IsraelNumber of speakers: Over 9 million people worldwide, including 5 million speakers in Israel

Hebrew is the only living language remaining in the Canaanite family. The oldest Hebrew inscriptions date back to 3,000 years ago.

But by 400 CE, it was hardly ever spoken. People still studied the language. It was used in Jewish religious ceremonies and in literature and poetry. But they didn’t use it in their everyday lives.

Languages die when people don’t speak them. So, how did Hebrew come back from the dead?

The change began in the late 19th century, as Jews began to return to Israel. Some began using it at home, with their families. Then, it moved to a language of instruction in some schools. And finally, it became the language of everyday life, with Jewish immigrants to Israel from around the world obliged to learn it and speak it.

Tamil

How old is the Tamil language? Over 2,200 years oldWhere is Tamil spoken? Mainly India, Sri Lanka, Singapore, and MalaysiaNumber of speakers: 70 million native speakers

The language of the Tamil people has been called the “the only language of contemporary India which is recognizably continuous with a classical past.”

Persian

How old is the Persian language? Old Persian goes back at least to the Achaemenid empire, which lasted from 600 BCE to 300 BCE.Where is Persian spoken? Iran, where it’s known as Farsi, Afghanistan (Dari), Tajikistan and Uzbekistan (Tajik)Number of speakers: 45 million to 60 million

The oldest inscription we’ve found so far in Old Persian dates back to between 522 BC and 486 BC. Darius the Great composed the inscription. However, it’s unlikely the great king took a chisel to the rock himself.

Through conquest, the Persian language spread throughout Iran and Central Asia. Today, it’s still spoken under the local names Farsi, Dari and Tajik today.

Lithuanian

How old is Lithuanian? It’s hard to say, but the first written text we have is from the 16th centuryWhere is Lithuanian spoken? LithuaniaNumber of speakers: 3 million

Lithuanian is a good example of why it’s so hard to answer the question “What is the oldest living language?”

On one hand, the earliest written record we have of Lithuanian is from 1500 AD. On the other hand, Lithuanian is one of most conservative Indo-European languages. In many ways, it’s as close as you’ll get to Proto-Indo-European. It also has quite a bit in common with ancient Sanskrit, Latin, and Greek.

Chinese

How old is the Chinese language? The earliest written example dates back to 1250 BCEWhere is it spoken? Primarily China, Taiwan, and SingaporeNumber of speakers: 1.2 billion

Basque

How old is the Basque language? It probably dates back to before the Indo-Europeans arrived in EuropeWhere is Basque spoken? Spain and FranceNumber of speakers: 55,000 to 720,000

Basque is a language isolate. It’s distinct from any other language in Europe. Therefore, linguists believe it predates Indo-European’s arrival on the continent. It is quite possibly the oldest language in Western Europe.

Arabic

How old is the Arabic language? Old Arabic dates back to 900 BCEWhere is Arabic spoken? The 22 states that make up the Arab League, plus some additional parts of Asia, Africa, and Europe.Number of speakers: 290 million

The earliest known of examples of written Arabic are personal names dating back to the 9th century BCE. By the end of the 8th century CE, a standardized version of Classical Arabic was in use for Arabic poetry and literature. Classical Arabic, in turn, developed into the Modern Standard Arabic used today.

Irish

How old is the Irish language? Older than the oldest known Ogham inscriptions, from the 3rd or 4th century CE.Where is Irish spoken? IrelandNumber of speakers: 1,168,000

Long ago, possibly as early as 2600 BC, a tribe speaking an ancient Celtic language arrived in Ireland. By the 3rd or 4th century BCE, that language had evolved into Primitive Irish. Inscriptions in Primitive Irish still survive today, carved in stone in the Ogham alphabet. By the 6th century, Irish monks were scribbling in Old Irish in the margins of Latin manuscripts.

Greek

How old is the Greek language? The earliest known written example is from 1450-1350 BCE.Where is Greek spoken? Mostly in Greece, Cyprus, Italy, Albania, Turkey.Number of speakers: 13 million

Greek has probably been around since at least 3000 BCE. However, the earliest known written example we have is on a Mycenaean tablet in the Linear B script, from 1450 BCE.

Of course, the language has changed since then. But it’s changed more slowly than many other languages. And according to Wikipedia, “Although Greek has undergone morphological and phonological changes comparable to those seen in other languages, never since classical antiquity has its cultural, literary, and orthographic tradition been interrupted to the extent that one can speak of a new language emerging.”

Aramaic

How old is the Aramaic language? Aramaic is at least 3000 years old.Where is Aramaic spoken? Small groups of Aramaic speakers live in Iraq, Turkey, Iran, Armenia, Georgia, and Syria.Number of speakers: Around 907,000 speakers for all Aramaic dialects combined

People spoke Old Aramaic in the Fertile Crescent as far back as the Iron Age, with the earliest inscriptions dating back to 1000 BCE. First, it was the language of the Assyrian Empire. Then, it was the language of the Achaemenid Empire. And then, it evolved into a sort of lingua franca for the entire Middle East.

As a result, Aramaic may soon become extinct. According to the Smithsonian, “Aramaic is down now to its last generation or two of speakers, most of them scattered over the past century from homelands where their language once flourished.”

Obviously, this list is far from comprehensive. If I missed your favorite ancient living language, feel free to mention it in the comments.

What about the other Celtic languages? Does only Irish survive yet? I’ ve been taught that there are some Gaelic languages still spoken in Scotland, Wales and even in the northern west of France. Thanks and best regards.

Of course there are other Celtic languages! There’s also Welsh, Breton (that’s the one you’re thinking of in NW France) and Scottish Gaelic. Manx and Cornish were once considered “extinct” but revival efforts have been somewhat successful.

Welsh and Irish are probably the oldest of the group. Welsh may even be older than Irish but Irish has the first written records so I went with that.

Another very ancient language that is not mentioned above is Berber- also known as Amazigh. It dates back to thousands of years before Christ. It is spoken in different dialects in North African countries, mainly in Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Lybia, the Siwa region of Egypt, Kanari Ilands, Mauritania, Niger, Mali, and a part of Burkina Faso. Its total speakers are around 50 million.

So, according to this list, people did not speak earlier than 3000 years ago? This must be a joke 🙂
It does not seem right, because it is not right. Human speech is hundreds of thousands, if not millions of years old. The oldest living language on Earth until 2015, scientifically approved as 65+thousands years old, is language Boa of Andaman Islands.

That’s an odd perspective. I would’ve understood a mention of Icelandic, concidering its conservatism that allows to see modern Icelandic and one in thousand year old sagas as the same language. But Persian and Old Persian? Seriously? And what exactly is “Chinese”? If you imply that modern Mandarin is the same language as Classical Chinese, why not add “the Romance language” to the list as well, spanning from Ancient Rome to the 21st century?
And if you’re talking about languages with the longest traceable uninterrupted histories, why include Hebrew and exclude Latin or Sanscrit with their daughter languages?

Hey, I mentioned at the beginning that this would be kind of arbitrary because of the way languages evolve, didn’t I?

On Persian, from Professor Gilbert Lazard, a famous Iranologist and the author of the book Persian Grammar: “Old, Middle and New Persian represent one and the same language at three states of its history.”

They “forgot” to list down the Macedonian Language which is also one of the languages on Roseta Stone. It’s quite weird since the name Macedonia is written in The Bible and Macedonian Kingdom exists before the Christ.

“…The first archaeological evidence of Tamil being used in inscriptions is 2,200 years old, and the earliest Tamil literature is estimated to be 2,500 years old. Evidence of Sanskrit being spoken in Northwest India dates back 4,000 years…”

Welsh is much older than Irish and has very different origins (the Welsh and Irish are categorised as ‘celtic’ but in reality have different ancestors). I think you included ‘irish’ to please the American Irish!!